Dear Al,
The word OF is not in the Hebrew.
Yigal
----- Original Message -----
From: "al cantley" <alcantley at cebridge.net>
To: <b-hebrew at lists.ibiblio.org>
Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2004 7:09 PM
Subject: RE: [b-hebrew] Isaiah 9:6
> Below is a message I saved some years ago from another forum - could the
> interpretation be correct?
>> "You mentioned the verse in Isaiah (namely Is. 9:6) where the pastor was
> asking about all the various "names" of God. I have the greatest
Bible!!!!
> It's called The Holy Name Bible by the Scripture Research (now out of
print, I
> believe) but let me quote the text for you here. A small grammatical word
> left out can make a big difference.
> "For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government
shall
> be upon His shoulder: and His name shall be called Wonderful, Counselor,
of
> the Mighty El, of the Father of Eternity; The Prince of Peace."
> Read that again and see what a difference it makes that the Son is a
counselor
> OF the Mighty El. He is also the wonderful counselor OF the Father of
> Eternity (He is NOT the Father). He is The Prince of Peace. HalleluYAH
!!! "
> Blessings, Kathy {MSDA 11/2/99}
>> Blessings,
> Al Cantley
>> -----Original Message-----
> Message: 12
> Date: Tue, 14 Sep 2004 06:31:18 -0500
> From: "Harold R. Holmyard III" <hholmyard at ont.com>
> Subject: Re: [b-hebrew] Isaiah 9:6
> To: b-hebrew at lists.ibiblio.org> Message-ID: <a06020401bd6c85b8a3f3@[205.242.61.60]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" ; format="flowed"
>> Dear Sujata,
>> The phrase that Karl breaks into "God
> (supernatural), Hero (human)" appears again in
> Isaiah 10:21, where it's translated "mighty God."
> Also there is a Masoretic conjunctive accent
> joining the two words. The phrase "prince of
> fulness" is more probably "prince of peace." The
> word for "peace" often carries this meaning in
> contexts of rulers of nations, the immediate
> context favors it, and the word is used with that
> meaning at the beginning of the next verse. The
> accents do favor the separation of "wonder" and
> "counselor," the way Karl has done, even though
> most translations seem to join the words together
> with something like "Wonderful Counselor." The
> phrase Karl translates as "Father of Time"
> (Abi-ad) is interestingly one word in the BHS
> edition of the Hebrew text, though the lexicons I
> have do not handle it that way. They divide it
> into )BY ("father") and (D ("time, eternity").
>> Yours,
> Harold Holmyard
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